The contrast between the two VP candidates on life and family couldn’t be more stark

October 4, 2016 (LifeSiteNews) -- Tonight is the only Vice Presidential debate, as Indiana Governor Mike Pence and former Virginia Governor, now Junior Senator Tim Kaine spar to attract voters at Longwood University in Kaine's home state.

The Washington Post reports that "Debate moderators suggest Mike Pence and Tim Kaine are basically the same person," but a quick look at the record of each candidate shows a world of difference in approaches to the right to life, natural marriage, and family issues.

Following the lead of self-identified Catholic Democrats like Ted Kennedy and Mario Cuomo, Kaine says he is "personally against abortion," but his record is given the highest praise by Planned Parenthood. The National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL) gave Kaine a perfect, 100 percent, abortion supporting score.

The prolife National Right to Life Committee gave Kaine a perfect "zero" for his unwavering pro-abortion record.

In fact, Kaine has admitted that he does not believe Christian teaching on homosexuality, saying in September that his support for same-sex "marriage" is "at odds with the current doctrine of the Church," and he predicted the Catholic Church's doctrine will change on homosexuality.

Sen. Kaine also fought for non-married couples to adopt children, telling the Washington Post in 2012, "There should be a license that would entitle a committed couple to the same rights as a married couple."

Kaine supports ObamaCare, stating, "I was a supporter and remain a supporter of the Affordable Care Act."

Mike Pence

Far from being "basically the same person," Indiana Governor Mike Pence is the political polar opposite of Kaine on abortion, sex education, marriage, homosexuality, same-sex "marriage," and ObamaCare.

On abortion, Gov. Pence has championed prolife legislation making it illegal to abort a baby on the basis of sex, race, nationality, or disability – including Down syndrome.

He fought for better health and safety standards for abortion facilities, and for increased penalties for abortion facilities that fail to properly report their business record. He also supported women's informed consent laws and extended them to include color photos of the baby's development.

The Indiana governor also encouraged giving life by providing $1,000 adoption credit for parents. The Indiana Right to Life (IRTL) further noted his support for mothers: "Gov. Pence’s Real Alternatives program at pregnancy resource centers offers life-affirming and compassionate care to women through pregnancy and as they begin parenting. In a one-year pilot program in Northern Indiana, Real Alternatives served more than 8,000 clients."

The prolife champion also promoted umbilical cord donation as the alternative to destructive embryonic stem cell experimentation, and he sponsored measures which protect citizens from being forced to pay for abortion coverage.

As a concrete result of his prolife leadership, four Indiana abortuaries closed and the Indiana abortion rate continuing to decline, further solidifying Pence's prolife reputation.

Perhaps most significantly, Pence co-sponsored the "Life at Conception Act," which "declares that the right to life guaranteed by the Constitution is vested in each human being," including the "preborn human person." The "Life at Conception Act" would empower Congress to make laws banning abortion nationwide.

On homosexuality, Pence is very clear, stating in 2000, "Congress should oppose any effort to recognize homosexuals as a 'discrete and insular minority' entitled to the protection of anti-discrimination laws similar to those extended to women and ethnic minorities." He also supported funding reparative therapy, instead of using federal funds for "organizations that celebrate and encourage the types of behaviors that facilitate the spreading of the HIV virus."

As a congressman, Pence championed the American family, stating in 2006, "Societal collapse was always brought about following an advent of the deterioration of marriage and family."

Pence strongly supports abstinence-only education, reasoning that "condoms are a very, very poor protection against sexually transmitted diseases." He further stated that sex education focusing on condom use by students "maybe inadvertently misleading millions of young people and endangering lives".

As is well known, Gov. Pence signed Indiana's Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which allowed Christians and other people of faith and morals to recuse themselves from the involvement in or the enabling of acts which betray their faith. The law met with such national backlash from by-then-entrenched gay activist pressure that Pence was forced to water the legislation down, making it essentially ineffective.

As a result of these obvious disparities between the candidates --even though both claim to be faithful Christians, the Indiana Right to Life has endorsed Pence for Vice President. A press release from the prolife organization stated summarily, “Gov. Pence’s pro-life stance is more than a talking point; Gov. Pence has put his pro-life position into action time and time again."

Contrasting the prolife platform of Trump/Pence against the pro-abortion platform of Clinton/Kaine, IRTL summarized, “Gov. Pence brings his pro-life credentials to the Trump presidential ticket. In contrast, Hillary Clinton has sought to expand abortion access and fund the life-ending procedure with our tax dollars. She has a cozy relationship with the abortion industry and cannot be trusted to protect life."

IRTL President and CEO Mike Fichter assured LifeSiteNews, "Mike Pence is pro-life in word and deed. He is a tireless advocate for the unborn and their mothers."

"We believe he will bring his strong stand for life to a Trump Administration."